• LAVA Moderator: Shinji Ikari

Backyard Vegetable Gardening & Livestock Raising & Sustainable Living

had my first deviled egg about a week ago at my mother's. Came home and turned every single backyard chicken egg into swingin' 70s appetizers the next day. Totally worth the effort— and a pretty good trade for chickenscratch's pickled green tomatos. ;)
 
pander, a little horseradish make good deviled eggs great...

Glad your tomato pickles came out good CS... Mine are almost identical to my ex mother in laws, and i didn't have to call her! Yay!

I have been eating kale... Will grow again, it's really good. Who knew?
The only thing left in the garden is kohlrabi, the 2nd planting of carrots, leeks, kale and bok choy. My cover crops are behind this year... Part of my garden got mulched with shredded leaves this morning. Garlic is still not in. Been really busy for the last 2 weekends. Maybe tommorow after work.

Micheal, last year our cherries at the end of the season got cooked down and run through a food mill to remove seeds and skins. Made a nice sauce.
 
I like kohlrabi raw in a salad. It gives a nice crunch like radishes.

Usually we cook it though. Peel it and boil like a potato. Taste is somewhat like a mild turnip... I put it in stirfrys too. If you don't overcook it, its texture reminds me of water chestnuts.
 
I finally got my garlic planted this morning. Days have been busy busy busy... From what I read I'm still good...
I have mine put to bed for the season too ken... Half is into cover crop and half is mulched with shredded leaves.
 
no you aren't CS. It's the shorter days. Nothing grows as fast when we aren't having sunlight 12 to 16 hours a day. Eliot Coleman explains it in detail in one of his books. I got a lot out of his books. I HIGHLY recommend all three.
 
so i was just in south florida and people there are just planting their gardens. Seemed weird to put tomato plants and seeds in on thanksgiving...
 
^ On NPR they had a story about all the fancy-pants rich people buying from climate-controlled greenhouses nowadays near their backyard from Maine to Virginia. Buying/growing local is so in! :)
 
Absolutely! Knowing about these random stories is the only positive of my 1.5 hr. commute home. ;)

Oh, and the text of the article is in the NSFW... it IS safe for work obviously but I didn't want to crowd up the page for people who don't want to read it. The transcript of the actual conversation from the radio is on the link.

http://m.npr.org/news/front/166154083?start=10

NSFW:
Tastier Winter Tomatoes, Thanks To A Boom In Greenhouse Growing

NPR
The taste of Mock's tomatoes starts with the seed. He uses only organic varieties, including cherry and several heirloom varieties.

Published: November 29, 2012
by Allison Aubrey

It may sound like an oxymoron: a delicious local, winter tomato — especially if you happen to live in a cold climate.

But increasingly, farmers from West Virginia to Maine and through the Midwest are going indoors to produce tomatoes and other veggies in demand during the winter months. "There's a huge increase in greenhouse operations," Harry Klee of the University of Florida tells us.

And surprisingly, according to skeptical foodies like chef Todd Wiss, the best greenhouse tomatoes come incredibly close to reproducing that taste of a perfectly ripe, summer garden tomato. "It's amazing," Wiss says after trying a greenhouse-grown Gary Ibsen's Gold heirloom tomato.

These are a far cry from the flavorless supermarket tomatoes typically found this time of year. When tomatoes are shipped long distances, they're usually harvested before they're ripe, which compromises taste. Plus, as we've reported before, some of the flavor of those supermarket varieties has been accidentally bred out.

The advantage of the new greenhouse model is that the tomatoes are grown not far from the cities where they're sold and eaten. And it's the locavore ethos that's driving this trend. "What's harvested today will be delivered to stores tomorrow," says Paul Mock of Mock's Greenhous and Farm in Berkeley Springs, W.Va.

Mock's business has boomed in the last few years, as retailers such as Wegmans and Whole Foods in the D.C., metro area snap up his heirloom and cherry tomatoes, as well as cucumbers and lettuces.

"There were times I had to pound the pavement" to sell produce, Mock says. Now he's being paid a premium, since "locally grown" produce is in high demand. "I'm finally having fun."

Now even New Englanders can get summertime-tasting, fresh tomatoes grown not too far from home. In Maine, Backyard Farms is leading the way. And vertical greenhouses are changing the landscape, too, from the new garden spot at Chicago's O'Hare Airport to Vertical Harvest of Jackson Hole, Wyo., which is just getting started.

So how do they grow? Many of these operations are turning to hydroponic farming, which means the plants are not grown in soil.

As we've reported before, soil is one key component of tomato flavor, but it's not the only one. The hydroponic tomatoes get their nutrients (and fertilizer) from liquid solutions fed directly via irrigation hoses. This typically requires less water and less land than traditional farming.

In fact, it uses up to 10 times less land and seven times less water per pound, according to Kate Siskel of BrightFarms, a company that's scaling up local produce by building greenhouses at or near supermarkets

Mock says there's another advantage of indoor growing: "We've had very little damage from bugs." And he's been able to avoid using chemicals on the leaves or fruit of his plants. [Copyright 2012 National Public Radio]
 
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